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Nurturing cognition through children’s early drawing experiences

2023, Heaton, Rebecca

When children draw multiple facets of their cognition, like their beliefs, actions and perceptions, activate and connect to facilitate expression. Children’s drawings and their drawing experiences however, are not always valued or nurtured as cognitive endeavors or given recognition as useful contributions to a child’s learning journey. This paper therefore presents how a cognition conceptual frame (Heaton, 2021), can be used to help people conceptualise and nurture cognition in early drawing experiences by considering cognitive forms, influencers and applications. It unpicks through a purposive micro-visual inquiry as to how cognition may be identified in a small sample of children’s drawings to demonstrate how cognition may present, be influenced, and be cultivated to develop an early learners’ cognitive abilities, capacity and understanding. This paper advocates for a renewed consideration of the cognitive complexities of children’s early drawing experiences and suggests that people designing and supporting such experiences should engage with cognition so that it is nourished through learning journeys and lived experiences.

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AI art education: Artificial or intelligent? Transformative pedagogic reflections from three art educators in Singapore

2024, Heaton, Rebecca, Low, Joo Hong, Chen, Vernon

With growing interest in the role and integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and AI pedagogies in transformative art education this paper voices the pedagogic reflections of three art educators in Singapore who have engaged AI in their art provision. It discusses and exemplifies the advantages (intelligent), like interdisciplinary opportunity, enhanced student engagement and increased connectionism, and limitations (artificial), like ethical and moral dilemmas and positioning, of AI integration in three art education settings showcasing how educators and learners engage. Model of pedagogic reflection is used to reveal how the educators provided transformative learning with AI, whilst showing the influence of personal art interests, technique modelling and professional reflections on teaching and making involving AI. Paper contributions include insights into and examples of AI practices and pedagogies (like AI literacy and prompt engineering), that are and could be used in art education, reflections on their successes and limits and commentary on the position of AI integration in the circular economy of art education. The paper is positioned to mobilize educator and student voice as an influential driver in the transformation of art education given ongoing developments in digital education futures.

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Managing cognitive dissonance in art teacher education

2023, Heaton, Rebecca, Chan, Shannon Lai Kuan

This paper presents autoethnographic strategies to manage cognitive dissonance in art teacher education. Dissonance, as a conflict in beliefs and actions, is discussed in educational research but not commonly in art education. By exposing the autoethnographic voices of three academic artist teachers based in the United Kingdom and Singapore, including that of one author, this paper identifies the constitution and location of cognitive dissonance in art education. Autoethnographic images and excerpts help reveal personal accounts of cognition whilst positioning dissonance in practice. Contributors to dissonance like belief and concept conflicts, demonstrative challenges and power relationships are also exposed. This paper recommends that educational stakeholders, such as education ministries, teacher education departments and school leadership teams collaborate to acknowledge, accept and begin to manage dissonance in art teacher education.

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Book review [Review of the book Letting art teach: Art education ‘After’ Joseph Beuys, Gert Biesta (2017)]

2020, Heaton, Rebecca

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The art of creative research exhibition @ NIE Art Gallery, curated by visual art staff at the National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

2023, Heaton, Rebecca

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Teaching on insecure foundations? Pre-service teachers in England’s perceptions of the wider curriculum subjects in primary schools

2020, Caldwell, Helen, Whewell, Emma, Bracey, Paul, Heaton, Rebecca, Crawford, Helen, Shelley, Claire

Subject marginalisation is an on-going concern across the primary education sector, particularly for the arts and humanities. This poses issues for pre-service teacher partnerships and for higher education institutions (HEIs) evaluating the role of subjects within their teacher training courses as they reform their curricula to prepare students to teach across diverse educational contexts. Through the interpretation of student voice, we disseminate a case study with primary initial teacher education (ITE) students that investigates learner perceptions of their training in under-represented foundation subjects. Emerging themes include tensions between university and school-based practices, and between curriculum models, together with the need to develop student adaptability and self-direction. The authors propose that if ITE students explore and take on the dispositions of changemakers, they will become equipped with the self-efficacy and adaptability needed to develop secure bases for teaching foundation subjects as they begin their careers.

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Cognition in art education

2021, Heaton, Rebecca

Whilst it is accepted that art education is a cognitive endeavour, the value and contribution of cognition to art education is often deliberated. By examining literature concerning conceptions of cognition and contextualising studies with the findings of a five-year artographic inquiry into cognition in the lived experiences of artist teachers, this paper is able to present a case for the reinstatement of cognition and cognitive study across policy, practice and research in art education. The paper shares a conceptual frame to assist engagement with cognition as a concept whilst presenting a strategy to support cognitive reinstatement in the changing climate of art education. Questions are posed and answered regarding cognition’s position in art education to bring reinstatement implications forward such as its complexity and productivity within education. Recommendations, such as increased engagement, voice projection and visibility, are also suggested to infiltrate transformation in future materialisations of cognitive engagement in the policy, practice and research of art education.

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A systematic literature review of cognitive exchange in higher degree visual art education

2023, Heaton, Rebecca, Kuan, Shannon Chan Lai

This literature review paper presents ways cognitive exchange occurs in higher degree visual art education. It also attempts to demystify concerns regarding the value and presence of cognitive exchange in art education, this is because cognitive exchange is not considered in art education with the same breadth or depth as in higher education. Cognitive exchange research in higher degree visual art education is limited but there has been a surge in interest about cognitive functioning in higher education. It is therefore timely to consider how cognitive exchange is understood across visual art practices at this level. This paper presents a two phased systematic review, where cognitive exchange literature in the higher degree context is considered alongside such literature in art education. Four spaces: the individual, social, pedagogic, and policy orientated are discussed to present cognitive exchange practices in higher degree visual art education. The spaces and forms of cognitive exchange profiled, provide a knowledge contribution to disciplines that intersect with the arts and humanities. This is because they mobilize where and how cognitive exchange forms, they present opportunities and uses for cognitive exchange and help suggest ways to support its growth.

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The impact of visual posts on creative thinking and knowledge building in an online community of educators

2020, Caldwell, Helen, Whewell, Emma, Heaton, Rebecca

This paper presents data from an Erasmus + project entitled Digital Leaders Across Boundaries (DLAB) to suggest ways learning is facilitated by engagement with collaborative online tools, and specifically through the use of creative visual posts. The DLAB project that informs this paper invited academics, teachers and students from four European countries to work together on a three-year project. The first year, which the data from this article refers to, focused on the theme of Technology Outdoors and resulted in three intellectual outputs, a four-week Massive Open Online Course (MOOC), a creative online community and a project website. This paper focuses on the online community, and demonstrates how the visual nature of the online community posts aided creative thinking and provided a hook for community members to adapt, develop and repurpose ideas. Using a visual ethnographic approach, the content of creative visual posts in the online community were tracked and coded to elicit how connections spread. This analytic process revealed observable ways in which ideas were developed and disseminated online. The paper findings exemplify, by exposing idea mapping, how the most effective posts allowed ideas to evolve by drawing relationships between creative outputs, participant thinking, learning cultures and practice. Sharing ideas facilitated creative thinking and collective knowledge building in the online community as the participants’ posts amplified the ideas seeded in the original MOOC content. The findings suggest that it would be beneficial for learning designers and educators to understand these processes in social online communities so as to nurture creativity within them.